I found a folder on my husband Landon’s laptop labeled “House cam”—with videos of me sleeping and showering. Horrified, I confronted him. He smirked and opened another folder—this one of my sister. Dozens of videos. When I demanded answers, he claimed she helped install the camera, thinking I was cheating.
I didn’t believe it—until I saw a video of her saying, “If she’s cheating, we’ll know.”
Needing answers, I followed her. She met with Reid, Landon’s coworker. They were clearly close. I confronted her. She said she was trying to protect me—at first. But she’d since learned Landon was selling private footage of me, her, even guests—to overseas buyers. Reid confirmed it.
That night, I copied every file and left.
I filed a police report. Landon begged me not to “ruin his career”—but never apologized. He was arrested. I divorced him.
It wasn’t easy. I rebuilt my life from a small studio, with two part-time jobs and weekly therapy. But I’m healing—and my sister’s back in my life.
Lesson? Even when betrayal feels unbearable, listen to your gut. Red flags are warnings. Don’t ignore them. Protect yourself early.
If you’re in doubt, investigate—don’t tolerate.